9.3.15

RAISING HELL - Pete's Introduction to Tom Wright's book

In 2009 Omnibus Press published a book by Tom Wright
entitled Raising Hell On The Rock’n’Roll
Highway, a memoir from Tom’s days as a tour
manager, friend and all-round supporter of several top flight British rock
groups, most notably The Who. This came about because back when The Who were
The Detours Tom shared a flat with Pete Townshend when Pete was attending
Ealing Art School. Not long afterwards Tom was deported from the UK for
possessing dope, leaving behind his collection of blues records. The rest is
history.

Pete
wrote the intro to this book and I hope he’ll forgive me for reproducing it
here as it seems like just the kind of thing for Just Backdated. Who fans
unfamiliar with the book are advised to check it out.

Tom Wright. Good man.

I have always been susceptible to a good man.

My
first was Graham Beard, my best friend (though I was perhaps not his best) from
the age of four until about eleven when we went to watch Bill Haley play and I picked
up a guitar. Then I was befriended by an assortment of fellows, from among whom
John Entwistle rose as the most constant until I was seventeen. Then at Ealing Art
School in the spring of 1962 I met Richard Barnes (later an important Who biographer)
and we laughed our way into a long-standing friendship so intense that it’s not
surprising it has quieted in recent years. Barney and I soon met Tom and ended
up in an apartment in the same house he shared with his friend Cam.

Almost
as soon as I found Tom, or he found me, I felt I lost him. Tom and Cam were effectively
deported from the UK for possession of the marijuana that had, along with
perfectly faded Levi’s and the wonderful collection of R&B records they shared,
made them both stars among the prettiest females and the coolest males at the college
where Tom studied photography. I read Tom’s story in this book and find that he
numbers me among the coolest males in 1962. Indeed, I appear to be the coolest in
some ways, but I was not cool. I was just susceptible.

Within
a few days of hearing Lightning Hopkins mauling out his tortured, primitive version
of ‘Trouble In Mind’ I had worked out how to play my own version of it. When Tom
heard me play it, he adopted me. Hanging with Tom, as his in-house troubadour,
always had a drop-dead moment hanging portentously in the air: the instant he decided to crash into bed to embrace whichever
beautiful girl was in his orbit. It would be a
few years on before I was able to turn my own best assets into an equally
intoxicating bird call.

Music
is magical. When they were deported, Tom and Cam had to leave their records
behind with Barney and me… as well as their beds. The musical kudos exerted by
Tom and Cam were suddenly passed to us. Not necessarily with quite the same romantic
association, but we could unleash memories. Tom says in this book that he also
left behind a stash of grass. That must have increased our pull, but it also
confused my fellows in The Detours, the school band I still played with because
it earned so much money. I think I became a little difficult in the months I
first began to get stoned. I was hearing music in a new way. The Detours were
pretty good, and when I started to introduce some R&B songs into the set
during late 1963, the surprise for us all was that the audience of Mods who
were starting to embed themselves in the local area where we most often
performed were fairly in sync with us. Indeed, as I taught John Entwistle ‘Green
Onions’ by Booker T. & the MGs, The Rolling Stones were playing their first
few shows at the local Ealing Club, casting the first serious glove down to The
Beatles, who were already beginning to seem like aliens, they were so
successful. By the time Tom and Cam’s R&B music collection had been filtered
into the Ealing scene, they had been forced to leave the country and watch from
afar as the British music revolution took place with R&B as its new
backbone.

It
was not until several years later that Tom and I reconnected. He worked on the
road with The Who in 1967, and took some of the most flattering photographs of
the band ever. I quickly realized Tom had a problem. He liked taking pictures
and developing the negatives, but he wasn’t crazy about making prints. He
wasn’t even keen on opening the various trunks in which they were haphazardly
stored. So the stash of unseen images grew. Some took 30 years to get printed,
some even longer. But whenever any of his friends saw his pictures, we knew he
had an extraordinary gift to capture the moment: he seemed to sense the gentle
approaching warp in time that predicted that something special would happen. Tom
lived so much in the moment, waiting for the moment, that some of us felt he
would never properly catalog and archive his work, let alone find time to tell
his incredible life story.

His
recent successful but substantial heart surgery provided the hiatus, the shock,
and finally the focus for this moving, touching, and funny book that tells and illustrates
more about the change in the function of pop music from the late ’50s to the
early ’60s than any semi-academic treatise written by journalist or critic. It
is clear now that R&B was vital to the shift in function of postwar pop.
From dance music designed as a romantic salve for the walking wounded of various
wars, we moved to the irritant teenaged codes of ’60s pop. This new music was
partly aimed at that same scarred older generation and suggested that their
postwar trauma, horror, and shame – hitherto denied and untreated – had somehow
echoed down to us. R&B, mainly performed by American black musicians and
including some powerfully rhythmic jazz and the most edgy folk music of the
time, was what underpinned British pop music of the ’60s new wave. The
combination of complaint, confrontation, and self-healing that was wrapped up
in the average R&B song – usually sung by a disgruntled but sanguine older
black American – was the right model for my white middle- and working-class
British generation too. It changed for the next forty years the purpose and
function of pop music itself.

Tom
has placed himself inside his own story, and that was necessary. This is also very
much my story. There is much of my life that Tom describes that will not appear
in my own memoirs simply because I don’t remember it. Some of his tales started
me laughing, some made me sad. The photographs are all wonderful, providing the
context and tangential colour that makes Tom’s story seem as particular, real,
and romantic as it must have felt to him as he experienced it.

One
thing is certain, had I not met Tom Wright, The Who would never have become
successful. We would have remained The Detours, a solid little pop band doing
what hundreds of others were doing around the same time: playing local clubs, pubs,
weddings, and parties purely for pleasure and fitting the program in and around
our day jobs. After a few years I would have stopped playing with them and gone
off to work as a sculptor, or for an ad agency. I needed the nudge of marijuana
to help me realize I had real creative musical vision. I needed to hear Jimmy
Reed to know powerful music could be made with extremely basic tools. I needed
to be given the recognition that I got from Tom of my special talent,
recognition that Roger Daltrey, the leader of our band, could not give me at
first because he had known me and nurtured me before I grew into my real skin.

It’s
wonderful to be able to say that today I am susceptible to Roger Daltrey. But the
memory of meeting Tom in 1962, and being specially blessed by him when he was
at his teenage peak, is the most significant moment of my musical life. Roger Daltrey
often puts the success of The Who down to his efforts of getting me out of bed,
where I lay stoned listening to Jimmy Reed, to go and play a local pub show with
the Detours. I’m afraid, as is often the case in Who history, Roger and I must differ.
I put our success down to the fellow who left that particular bed behind when he
was deported.